2nd back surgery for Gronk I believe, that can't be good. He's probably one of those guys that will be done by 30.

Some would say the same about 2 total knee reconstructions .As with Bob I hope Gronk comes back football needs the good guys.

__________________ ....DISCLAIMER: All of my posts/threads are my expressed typed opinion and the reader is not to assume these comments are absolute fact, law, or truth unless otherwise stated in said post/thread.

I don't think because a player has to deal with multiple injuries within one time frame that classifies him as a bust. At worst, I think he'll be like Bob Sanders, i.e. effective when healthy, just never healthy. At best we know what he's capable of. But I think bust should be reserved for high draft picks who don't pan out for reasons like lack of motivation, no work ethic, taking the money and running, etc. Not guys who put in the work and have proven they are playmakers, but just had a couple of injuries with bad timing.

If Gronk is never the same after this, I still don't think he's a bust. He proved he belonged in the league when healthy. And yeah, he might have a short life span in the league, but that's not the same as some kid drafted high who lets the fame get to him, and never puts in the work. The word bust is just thrown around way too much imo, and this a prime example.

Interesting to say the least. I still find it funny they gave Frederick a 2nd round grade and still picked him in the 1st. Quite interesting to see the QBs they have graded as well.

What I think is more interesting is that they didn't take DT Floyd, when he was at their spot, and ranked as a high 1st. But, Frederick was certainly more of a need, and they got an extra pick. Hopefully Frederick never lives up to what they think he is!

He was drafted mid 2nd round, and has had solid production. I could name a couple mid 2nd round receivers who were busts, but really prefer not too. He had a bit of injury history I believe, and has performed well.

He may level out at below star level after his back injury- Ross Tucker said he was never the same after his. If it does then he ends up having a good, not great career in the NFL. He was never going to be HoF material, so you take the years you get out of him and be happy with it.

i don't know, he's on a feverish pace, even if you count last year. a 10 year career was a reasonable expectation:

I don't think because a player has to deal with multiple injuries within one time frame that classifies him as a bust. At worst, I think he'll be like Bob Sanders, i.e. effective when healthy, just never healthy. At best we know what he's capable of. But I think bust should be reserved for high draft picks who don't pan out for reasons like lack of motivation, no work ethic, taking the money and running, etc. Not guys who put in the work and have proven they are playmakers, but just had a couple of injuries with bad timing.

If Gronk is never the same after this, I still don't think he's a bust. He proved he belonged in the league when healthy. And yeah, he might have a short life span in the league, but that's not the same as some kid drafted high who lets the fame get to him, and never puts in the work. The word bust is just thrown around way too much imo, and this a prime example.

I understand what you're saying. There are people out there though that look at players that were either drafted in the first round or handed big contracts and consider them busts or non-busts/lived up to the hype/good (basically 2 categories). I would say that while Gronk was drafted in the 2nd round so that isn't a first rounder, but was still a high pick he exceeded his expectations. Then he was handed his ginormous contract, which was well deserved, and after he got that contract he's gone from a pro bowler to injury prone/hardly ever on the field player that has had more surgeries than most players have until they're 30. He's only 24.

As for the whole "because a player has to deal with multiple injuries within one time frame that classifies him as a bust" I would disagree with that. If a player can't play whether its talent or not staying on a field because of injuries or off field trouble, those are all factors of keeping a player from playing, thus making them a bust because they can't play.

And remember you're only a bust if you have had a large contract handed to you or are drafted highly (1-2).

Midway through his first season in Denver, John Fox was standing on the practice field sideline one day when an errant football hit the ground well in front of an intended receiver's feet, skipped hard across the grass and shot into the unsuspecting coach's legs. Fox looked around, rubbing his shin with a pained "WTF?" look on his face, only to discover that instead of coming from a confused ball boy or a malfunctioning Jugs machine, the pass actually had been thrown by his new starting quarterback, Tim Tebow.

Quote:

When the Broncos defense was on the field, offensive coaches would often tell Tebow the first series of plays they wanted to run when the team got the ball back. Tebow would nod, and they'd separate. And then, invariably, a short while later he'd ask for the information again. Sometimes this ritual would repeat right up until Tebow had to duck into the huddle and call the play. As a result, despite starting only 11 games in 2011, Tebow was flagged for delay of game an NFL-high seven times. Worse still was the fact that, according to scouts, Tebow almost never audibled because he struggled to quickly and properly read defenses. And of all the deadly sins Tebow committed against quarterbacking, this was the worst: lacking the self-awareness to recognize and fix these shortcomings. Maybe the most shocking part of Tebowmania isn't that he has been cast out of the NFL after just three years but that he lasted as long as he did.

__________________ "So let me get this straight. We have the event of the year on TV with millions watching around the world... and people want a punt, pass, and kick competition to be the halftime entertainment?? Folks, don't quit your day jobs."- Matty

Actually that cowboys board is basically spot on. I agree with almost all of it. Especially QB

Leave it to Jerry Jones to get the board right, and still screw up the draft.

He passed on Floyd to take someone who would have easily been there a round or two later.

Sad thing is JJ is still better than Vinny. Vinny would have selected a long snapper with our second and then 5 or 6 WR's to go with Brandon Weeden, who he would have drafted last year (knowing Vinny, he would have traded up from the 6th spot just to get Weeden). We would still be the Cleveland Browns of the NFC if that clown was still around.

Leave it to Jerry Jones to get the board right, and still screw up the draft.

He passed on Floyd to take someone who would have easily been there a round or two later.

Sad thing is JJ is still better than Vinny. Vinny would have selected a long snapper with our second and then 5 or 6 WR's to go with Brandon Weeden, who he would have drafted last year (knowing Vinny, he would have traded up from the 6th spot just to get Weeden). We would still be the Cleveland Browns of the NFC if that clown was still around.

Hey, nick sunberg is an injury risk! Long snapper would have made sense I. The second